PSI- Issue 9

Daniele Rigon et al. / Procedia Structural Integrity 9 (2018) 151–158 Rigon et al./ Structural Integrity Procedia 00 (2018) 000–000

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In order to obtain the energy distribution at the notch tip of the considered specimens, first the Altair video recording file (*.ptw) was converted into an ASCII film file (*.asc), which is readable in Matlab. After that, the ASCII file was input to a dedicated Matlab script, that converts it into a Matlab 3-dimensional array ( T ) having dimension m-by-b-by-p. The m, n values are the dimensions of the frame expressed in terms of pixels, reduced to avoid vignetting (m=136 px, n=167 px), and p is the number of frames acquired by the infrared camera (i.e p is equal to 2000). A schematic illustration of T script is shown in Fig. 4a. Let i, j and k be the indexes of T . An element of this 3D array corresponds to a temperature value of the n-th pixel having coordinate i and j for the k-th frame. In this way, fixing i and j and plotting T ij against the time (obtained from the division of the k index value by f acq ), the time variant temperature graph, commonly used for evaluated the Q parameter, is obtained for the n-th pixel.

Fig. 5. Example of raw data of the energy distribution Q(x,y) (a) and along the coordinate y=0 (along the notch bisector (b). The filtered energy distribution Q flt (x,y) (c) and the relevant distribution along the notch bisector (y=0) (d). (a-d) data are referred to the acquisition obtained at N = 8.12ꞏ10 3 cycles of the specimen characterised by r n =0.5 mm, σ an =130 MPa, and N f = 6.76ꞏ10 4 . A time window equal to 0.1s was tentatively assigned to a numerical variable, named “dt”, for evaluating the cooling gradient of the n-th pixel and it was kept constant for all pixels (see Fig. 4b). In practice, the numerical evaluation of the cooling gradient was performed by the polyfit matlab function, which returns the value of the slope of the linear fitting of the data within the value of dt, then Q ij is evaluated applying Eq. (1). This operation was routinely performed for all pixels by a for loop , resulting in a m-by-n matrix composed by Q ij values, called Q. Having the same dt value fixed for all the pixels and a certain level of noise in the measurements, the cooling gradient might result meaningless for some pixels. Therefore, after plotting the Q matrix, a check was performed to single-out unrealistic spike-like values. Then, the dt value was iteratively modified in the range from 0.05 s to 0.15 s

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